Parkman77 wrote: » A group of my friends and myself (4 or 5 of us) used to go out drinking most Saturday nights back in the day. We’d all walk down the Main Street heading for the first pub of the night. The stinge would always be the first to the pub, so he could open the door and leave everyone else in ahead of him. Which meant of course he’d be the last to the bar, avoiding having to buy the first round. Knowing full well that if he did this a couple of times for each different pub that we went to, that he would have missed out on buying at least one round over the course of the night.
Graces7 wrote: » antrim14 wrote: » small point; tesco etc are not allowed to sell out of date food... I buy reduced so know these things No stores are allowed to sell food beyond it's expiry date (best before is a different matter).
antrim14 wrote: » small point; tesco etc are not allowed to sell out of date food... I buy reduced so know these things
Count Down wrote: » His children used to love Kellogg's corn flakes but when he took over control of the shopping from his wife he always bought the supermarket's own brand even though the children hated it. He said, "Corn flakes are corn flakes, and besides the own brand are only half price!"
Quazzie wrote: » This makes perfect sense. His biggest mistake was not putting the own brand cornflakes into a kelloggs box, and the kids would've never noticed.
Count Down wrote: » There was an English magazine article a few years ago about this sap who used to wait until just before closing time at his local supermarket (Sainsbury's, I think) on a Saturday and buy the bread, cakes and some other perishables which would be half price about an hour before closing time. He was quite well off, but wouldn't dream of spending the extra money, and would freeze the bread and use it during the week, only taking out and defrosting what he estimated he and his family would need for that particular day. His children used to love Kellogg's corn flakes but when he took over control of the shopping from his wife he always bought the supermarket's own brand even though the children hated it. He said, "Corn flakes are corn flakes, and besides the own brand are only half price!"
razorblunt wrote: » That still happens, have you ever seen the freeding frenzy in supermarkets when lads put out the repriced soon to expire stock? It would make piranhas take a long look at themselves.
mloc123 wrote: » My younger sister worked in Tesco when she was in college, she had to do price reductions on chilled food in the evenings and would need somebody to block of the aisle while doing it as people would barge and push to get stuff
Count Down wrote: » There was an English magazine article a few years ago about this sap who used to wait until just before closing time at his local supermarket (Sainsbury's, I think) on a Saturday and buy the bread, cakes and some other perishables which would be half price about an hour before closing time.
Mollyb60 wrote: » Yeah I work with a guy who works in Tesco at the weekends. He said people act like animals when they're reducing stuff. All for 20p off something. He said he constantly has to tell people to stop pushing and shoving at him or he'll just take the whole trolley away.
FanadMan wrote: » When I was working in Derry, I lived quite close to a Sainsburys and used to get cooked chickens that way. Think they used to cost 25p or so. Otherwise they'd be thrown out. Two lunches and a dinner for 25p was bloody good value!
wally79 wrote: » Enough of the I’m not stingy I’m frugal happy clappy pat myself on the back stuff Less whinge more stinge
veryangryman wrote: » Stingy story...Just been on a business trip and claimed for the cost of lugagge that i bought for it :P
Greybottle wrote: » No, he doesn't have to pay for them. We pay for them through all sorts of taxes. Its something that seriously pisses me off. North Inner City where I live is rife with that. People dumping bags beside overflowing bins. Seagulls rip them apart and it blows everywhere. The place is a Fcuking tip.
Mr.Wemmick wrote: » We have a friend we have known for a long time. Over the last year or two we have noticed a change in him which at first we tried to shake off as it didn’t make much sense.. but then, slowly but surely, we realised he had become a manipulating user and a stinge. If he drops in and ends up staying long enough and we cook food, he will take our offer of food with a clear attitude that he is doing us a favour by eating a cooked meal. "Ah, well, wouldn’t want you to throw it away if there’s plenty” “I won’t disappoint you and say no, even if I have to be going soon” "I’ll have a little so as not to be rude, but then I have to go” "I’ll not hurt your feelings by saying no, hahaha" He has done this quite a few times with rushed sentences like above, but then, quick as a flash, he is deep in another subject, subtly done too so we never really noticed until it happened quite a number of times. Easy to eat a meal by happening to just be there and then you do not have bring wine or dessert or gift for the kids, etc. Anytime we were all out in a group, he would put his hand in his pocket less and less, eventually meaning we all paid more for the drinks than he did. But the straw that broke the camel’s back, was his prolonged pretense at being ill. Ended up at our place a lot because we were manipulated into feeling sorry for him - an injury with his leg meant he was in pain, couldn’t get around very well after a stint in hospital. One time when he was at ours, I happened to walk in on him in mid-flow conversation on the phone when he thought I was out getting something from the car. He was walking normally up and down the room with a light skip to his step and full of high spirits having a good chat with someone. I left the room, went into the kitchen to check the dinner and said nothing. He was soon back to grimacing and painful oohs and ahhs over dinner and left the house with his limp on show. We are polite and friendly to him when we see him, but no longer have him over to the house and mostly avoid him. Why on earth would you go to the bother of milking it, manipulating friends to that extent, all for what, a free meal and a drink. We would never begrudge a friend a meal or a drink. It takes all sorts.. and some folks are just selfish, manipulative and twisted in their thinking.
Electric Sheep wrote: » Or he's recently fallen on hard times and is embarrassed to tell anyone.
Mr.Wemmick wrote: » Considering he bought himself an expensive lovely-looking new racing motorbike last year, I don't think so.